Southern California, Atmospheric river and flood
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If rain falls as forecast, this storm could result in downtown Los Angeles seeing its wettest November since 1985. Heavy rain brings the possibility of damaging flooding and landslides.
LOS ANGELES - Wet weather is expected in Southern California over the next several days as a series of storms move into the region. The National Weather Service is predicting the heaviest impacts to be between 3 a.m. and 6 p.m. Saturday, with a moderate risk for damaging flooding and debris flow. The storm is expected to last through Sunday.
Mammoth won't be opening this weekend, thanks to the storm. The ski resort's opening day was planned for Saturday, but it's been pushed back.
Heavy rain continues to pound Southern California today. The National Weather Service expects 2 to 3 inches will fall over the next 24 hours. That could push the storm's total over 6 inches in some locations.
FOX 11 Los Angeles on MSN
Incoming storm to bring heavy rain across Southern California: See an updated timeline
A major weather shakeup is expected across Southern California as we shift from the recent warm trend to significantly cooler weather and an incoming storm starting mid-week.
On the surface, the weather forecast seems to favor Iowa. For one, the Hawkeyes are far more used to playing in bad weather than the Trojans are. In addition, wet conditions tend to favor a more physical, grind it out style of play akin to the one Iowa likes to deploy, rather than USC’s explosive offense.